The Perlin Project began in 2018 and has rapidly evolved to the point where it features over 30,000 transactions per second in its Directed Acyclic Graph (DAG) based Leaderless Proof of Stake (LPoS) blockchain. The combination of speed and the computing resource marketplace is ideal for Perlin, which is being touted as a solution to dApp development for those projects requiring a large amount of computing resources. This is a distributed computing platform that was built on top of Perlin’s DAG. It will turn underutilized computing resources into commodities that can be combined into parallel batches of computing power. This can be useful for projects that need to analyze big data, or for artificial intelligence and machine learning tasks that are computationally intensive. The platform was created with three major components. These are the self-audited distributed ledger, cryptographic proof of computational resources, and a framework for highly parallel blind computing.
The Perlin Network is unique among platforms seeking to pool computing power in that it will be able to use basic sources such as smartphones and gaming consoles, as well as more powerful computers and servers. The resources made available by each participant are quantified through a cryptographic hash function. The addition of a decentralized token is meant to help commoditize computing resources and to assist in balancing global supply and demand for computing resources. The native token of the Perlin Network is known as PERLs, and they are used to facilitate the transfer of value on the network and to make payments for services. Anyone who wishes to access the computational resources on the Perlin Network will need to use PERLs.